I have been using it less and less this past year:
- at the beginning because of the troubles having it run on Vista,
- then because I really like the possibility to have my feeds everywhere instead than on one PC (I use multiple computers)
- and finally because with a web based aggregator I can immediately
SHARE and MARK what I read and make it available again for other people
to see. This one is a killer feature of the various google reader or
bloglines... letting people make their own link blog republishing stuff
they read and like. Of course I am not complaining... to do such a
thing you would need an infrastructure - as opposed to just releasing a
program that runs on the PC...

I agree that the ability to access your feeds from anywhere is a great advantage of Web-based feed readers. On the other hand, I haven't found a Web-based feed reader that has all of the features I've come to take for granted in RSS Bandit especially when you consider some of the extra features like downloading podcasts and being able to access newsgroups. I've always wanted to be able to provide the best of both worlds to our users which is why a few years, I added support for the NewsGator API with the intent of enabling our users get to no longer have to choose between a desktop feed reader and a Web-based one, and can use whichever they want whenever they want (i.e. the Outlook and Outlook Web Access model).

However my implementation was incomplete and I incorrectly blamed the API when in truth I didn't do a great job in understanding how the API should be used. Yesterday, I revisited the problem and fixed a number of brain dead misuses of the API in our implementation (e.g. ReplaceSubscriptions isn't a shortcut that can be used in place of multiple calls to AddSubscription and DeleteSbscription) . Now the feature works like a charm and I've created two screen casts showing how you can get the world's best RSS reading experience for FREE, today.